I tackled the Siamese hot swap bay SATA power cables today. I started by crimping the ATX pins on the ends of some #18 wire I had knocking about. I went with #18 since there will be only two HDDs at most on this cable so I didn't need to worry about excessive voltage drop although I did split the cable to make sure I didn't have any dropouts when plugging in a second HDD; I also didn't feel like fighting with crimping the pins. I then stripped 1/4" of insulation from the wire a little ways from the pin and spliced a second wire to the first, then soldered the connection.
After that, I shrunk a heat shrink sleeve over the splice...
...then plugged the pins into the PSU connector. That actually worked out cleaner than what I expected, despite the crowding.
This what the entire cable looked like at this point.
The top bunch of wires going straight out from the connector are for the 3.5" swap bay I added in the 5.25" cage. The wires heading south of the connector are for the built in swap bay.
After this I developed cerebral flatulence and forgot to take pictures until I had the cable finished and installed. I had "fun" installing it so I'm not taking it back out for pictures.
After cutting the wires to length and slipping some sleeving and heat shrinks over each bunch of wires (five in each bunch), I crimped the SATA power connector pins on the ends of each bunch of wires (ten pins total) and plugged the pins into SATA power connector bodies (two). Here are what the pins and connector bodies look like.
The first five pins crimped just fine but I couldn't break off the little "tree" they come on. I normally cut the "tree" and leave a bit of it attached to the end of the pin to give my fat, little fingers something to hang onto when I'm crimping the pin. This an example of what I'm talking about from when I built my current case.
Normally, all I have to do is just bend the tree back and forth a few times and it will break right off, which is what happened after I crimped the five ATX pins. Not with these miserable, misbegotten, malevolent pins. I had to cut the bloody things off and it was a bugger getting in there to cut them, even with the tiny dikes I have. On the second cable, I had trouble crimping the first two pins to the insulation. I have no idea why; the remaining three crimped just fine and dandy. At least the problem crimps held up to the pull test. After inserting the pins into the connector bodies, I stretched the sleeving out and shrunk the heat shrink sleeves on the ends. I also used some brush on Krazyglue to make sure everything stayed put (I like that stuff; it's much better than the nail glue I've been using).
Each leg of the Siamese cable goes through a different wire management hole. The leg going to the 3.5" swap bay was easy to route. I don't have it tied down yet because I have other cables that will be running alongside it I haven't made yet. The one going to the power cable for the built in swap bay was tricky (by this time, I was bluing up the air a bit because of the silly little but plentiful frustrations I had been dealing with plus my back and the arthritis in my left thumb were protesting with language bluer than what I was using). I finally got the second cable from Hell clipped into place where the miserable, misbegotten, little bugger is going to stay until the place it came from freezes over! At that point, I was ready to call it quits. I'll post some pictures of the installed cable in the next day or two.
I did some looking around online for a Bluray combo ODD to add to the one I already have. I found an LG that looks just like the one I have already except it doesn't have Litescribe. It is also a BD burner, instead of BD-ROM like I have, which is a bit overkill since I will probably never burn a BD (but, then again, I've been wrong before). Since it would, at least, match the ODD I already have, I went ahead and ordered it for store pickup at my friendly, neighborhood Fry's Electronics. I'll pick it up either tomorrow or Tuesday. Making a cable for the two ODDs and the Molex socket on the MOBO will actually be simpler than the single SATA power and two Molex connectors (one for the MOBO and one in case I decide to put my internal card reader back in) I originally planned on making. This way, I can use two punch down type SATA power connectors (I still have a few left) and a single Molex connector daisy chained together without having to crimp two wires to single pins. If I ever decide to replace the second ODD with the internal card reader, I can always make an adapter cable to go from the punch down connector into a Molex connector. I'll probably use #16 AWG for that cable. I now just need to decide which of the two ODDs will go on top and which will go under it. I'll be using the new one almost 100% of the time and the old one only when burning a Lightscribe disk.
I also need to make a power cable to go to the sound card. I'm not quite sure how I will route that one yet; I may Siamese it with the cable going to the ODDs and MOBO Molex connector. I'm also still debating on how to route the front panel audio to the sound card. The socket for it is in a stupid place on the side of the sound card.